“Temple, what have you done?" he asked the minute she hung up.
“I've brought in an expert witness: a fairy godmother with a heavy Elvish fetish, it turns out."
“Who?"
“Oh, a music lover of our acquaintance."
“Not Lieutenant Molina." Matt sounded shocked.
Temple couldn't talk for laughing. "Holy Half-note! Not Molina. I wouldn't sic her on you for anything. She not only is convinced Max should be on the Ten Most Wanted List for
Temple pranced to the door on her mid-heel pumps to flourish it open.
Behind it stood Electra Lark, wearing a subdued black-and-pink muumuu and carrying two canvas bags bulging with books. She assumed the wide-legged and -armed stance of an entertainer as she belted out:
“If your baby done left you, You've found the right place to dwell.
The bellhop is a black cat, The landlady's dressed in black, Down Las Vegas's own Lonely Street, At Huh-Huh-Heartbreak Huh-Huh-Hotel.”
Chapter 16
Send
(Elvis never sang or recorded the schmaltzy ballad "Send in the Clowns," but he should have)
"I feel like a fraud," Matt said, examining the vast white elephantine bulk of the Kingdome complex shining in the thin winter sunlight.
“You do have a radio show," Temple pointed out. She locked the Storm and they started walking into King-dome World.
“But not the kind of radio show that would ever welcome an Elvis imitator."
“Not knowingly anyway," Temple agreed.
“And what makes you think I could recognize a voice I heard only once among this horde of burning hunks of love.”
Temple paused to eye him. " 'This horde of burning hunks of love.' That's good. Very hip. You must have absorbed a lot from Electra's Elvis books last night."
“A lot and not enough. I've never glimpsed a more promising or a more poisoned life story before, not even in confession. These tell-all books do tell it all, don't they?"
“I don't know. I never read them."
“Virtuously indifferent to other people's dirt, or just too busy?"
“A bit of both, I imagine. So Elvis's private life was as spectacular as his public success, huh?"
“Both seem to have gone up and down. I can see why the mysteries of Elvis are so tantalizing.... What is that?”
Matt had stopped to stare at the four-story-tall tilted guitar in the Kingdome's massive atrium. Heads could be seen zipping along the handle and strings while musical riffs boomed out from everywhere.
“It's a slide. A guitar slide, get it? Popular with kids."
“I guess making noise always is," Matt shouted over the hullabaloo. "Are you sure I can use my radio show as a pretext to listening to various Elvis voices?"
“Who's to challenge you? Publicity-hungry Elvis imitators would cozy up to a scrofulous porcupine if they thought it meant airtime. Speaking of which, Crawford Buchanan will suck up any attention this circus can get him. You are Media now, Matt. You can go anywhere and ask anything and people will trip over their own toes trying to catch your attention."
“I'll believe it when I see it. But at least I might get to see your major crown of thorns in a brand-new hairdo."
“Oh, the Crawf's Elvis pompadour does nothing for him, not that anything would. Try not to laugh out loud." "The Crawf?"
“His unofficial stepdaughter's term. I had stereotyped her as a rather vacant sleazehead, but it turns out that's just the façade of a typical teenager nowadays. Quincey may not be a happy camper, but she's not such a dim Coleman lantern, after all."
“How could she be a happy camper, with the Crawf for a father figure? I recall Buchanan as an obnoxious combo of bootlicker and egomaniac, and I don't find that particularly laughable. Those people can be dangerous. That's what some of Elvis's Memphis Mafia turned into."
“Obsequiously overbearing?"
“Well, only obsequious to Elvis; overbearing to every- one else."
“Sounds big-time dysfunctional."
“And what do you call this?”
Temple lowered her eyes from the circling Elvis statues on high to the milling crowds, among whom the Elvis-like black-shag wigs and industrial-strength sunglasses materialized here and there. And this was just the come-as-you-weren't public; they hadn't even encountered any genuine imitators yet.
“You know," she mused, "Las Vegas could be the world's first theme park for the dysfunctional. I never thought of the old town as therapy."
“Or metropolitan enabler," Matt said. "I'm glad I skimmed Electra's books. This all should mean a lot more to me."
“If it means anything at all," Temple agreed. "I thought we'd take advantage of our on-site guide." "On-site guide?"
“The Priscilla impersonator.”